HD 176693

HD 176693, also known as Kepler-408, is a star with a close orbiting exoplanet in the northern constellation of Draco. It is located at a distance of 291 light years from the Sun based on parallax measurements, but it is drifting closer with a radial velocity of −55 km/s. The star is predicted to come as close as 7.0957 pc in 1.6 million years. It has an apparent visual magnitude of 8.83, which is too faint to be viewed with the naked eye.

The spectrum of HD 176693 matches an F-type main-sequence star with a stellar classification of F8V. The star is older than the Sun, at $$. It is slightly and uniformly depleted in heavy elements compared to the Sun, having about 75% of the solar abundance of iron and other heavy elements. HD 176693 is a chromospherically inactive star, although there is weak evidence for tidal spin-up due to star-planet interaction.

HD 176693 is 5% more massive than the Sun and has a 25% larger radius. It is radiating 1.9 times the luminosity of the Sun from its photosphere at an effective temperature of 6,080 K. The star is spinning with a rotation period of 12.89 days. As of 2016, multiplicity surveys have not detect any stellar companions to HD 176693.

Planetary system
In 2014, a transiting Sub-Earth planet b was detected on a tight 2.5 day orbit. Initially reported with a relatively low confidence of 97.9%, it was confirmed in 2016.

The planetary orbit is inclined to the equatorial plane of the star by 41.7$$°. Such strong spin-orbit misalignment is unique for a sub-Earth transiting planet, and needs either additional giant planets in the system or a history of close stellar encounters to explain it. The planet may also be a captured body originating from elsewhere.